What is WICOR?
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Writing Writing is basic to thinking, learning and growth, requiring students to consider issues in new, complex ways, contributing to self-knowledge, and helping them to clarify and order experience and ideas.
Writing consists of an essential, complex set of tools that enhance critical thinking—good writers tend to be good thinkers, and improving cognitive skill enhances one’s writing ability. |
Inquiry“Critical thinking,” is a term commonly used in higher education to refer to a generic set of complex but ill-defined cognitive processes.
According to the Foundation for Critical Thinking, “thinking is not driven by answers but by questions,” positioning inquiry as foundational to the higher level cognition required for college success. AVID’s emphasis on inquiry focuses on the application of Costa’s three levels of “intellectual functioning,”whereby learning to ask progressively more complex questions is scaffolded and students become progressively more metacognitive—aware of their own thinking processes. |
CollaborationCollaborative learning involves intentionally designed student groups engaged in “co-laboring” toward meaningful learning outcomes, using active engagement activities planned to maximize learning, and facilitating the sharing of the workload- Barkley, Cross and Major (2005).
AVID’s high engagement learning strategies involve collaborative activities through which individual students help each other learn, thereby strengthen their own learning. Students are responsible for their own learning; faculty serve as facilitators in a learning community working together for the success of the group. |
OrganizationBecause college students face competing priorities that are often overwhelming, organizational skills are critical to success in academic and social situations.
According to Cuseo, Fecas & Thompson (2010), college students “who have difficulty managing their time have difficulty managing college.” Management of time and energy and learning to set priorities can make the difference between success and failure for new college students. In addition, students must learn to plan effectively for academic assignments, organizing information and ideas for papers and projects. Consistent with its focus on promoting “individual determination,” AVID provides support for the organization of materials, assignments, assessments, handouts and notes. |
Reading to LearnCollege instructors consider reading a basic skill, one that all students should have acquired before entering college.
However, students often neither complete assigned readings nor know how to effectively read assigned material—one of the most common challenges reported by college instructors (Gottschalk & Hjortshoj, 2004). AVID’s approach to “critical reading” provides faculty with common-sense and research- based strategies designed to help students read more effectively. Skills such as “reading with purpose" can be scaffolded with more complex activities to ensure that students are connecting reading material to prior knowledge, understanding the structure of texts, and using text-processing strategies during and after reading to improve comprehension. |